The LCK is also available in a print edition, four times the length, published by Yonagu Books on Amazon.

Now available: volume 2— Advanced Language Construction! Does the LCK seem pretty basic to you, and you want to delve into morphosyntax, logographic languages, predicate logic, and more? Get the sequel today!

This set of webpages (what’s a set of webpages? a webchapter?) is intended for anyone who wants to create artificial languages— for a fantasy or an alien world, as a hobby, as an interlanguage. It presents linguistically sound methods for creating naturalistic languages— which can be reversed to create non-naturalistic languages. It suggests further reading for those who want to know more, and shortcuts for those who want to know less.
—Mark Rosenfelder

The above is a sample of an artificial language of my own, Verdurian. If you’re curious, it reads Ďitelán mu cum pén veaďen er mësan so Sannam, meaning “Go forth in peace to love and serve the Lord.” The accented Ď sounds like the th in then; the vowels should be pronounced more or less as in Spanish. Here’s a recording of Joseph Fatula reading it.

How about a suite of webpages? Does that sound better?
Chico: OK, you’re the Swede of Webpages, an’ I’ll be the Mexican of Usenet.

The order of the steps above is significant. Working backwards (e.g. creating a text and then devising a grammar to match) will lead to an inconsistent if not incoherent work.
A bad example is Hergé’s Syldavian; since he basically made it up in pieces, as he needed it, it’s impossible
to create a consistent phonology or morphology for it, based on the scraps
of the language provided in the Tintin books. (This didn’t prevent me
from coming up with my best attempt at a Syldavian
grammar.)